Development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries

This study provides a thorough investigation into the design and evaluation of a single switch capacitor active balancer prototype designed for lithium-ion batteries. Additionally, it explores both hardware testing and software simulations, with the main goal of examining its effectiveness in differ...

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Main Author: Wong, Wei Jun
Format: Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis
Published: 2024
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Online Access:http://eprints.utar.edu.my/6441/1/3E_1902895_Final_Report_%2D_WEI_JUN_WONG.pdf
http://eprints.utar.edu.my/6441/
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Institution: Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman
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spelling my-utar-eprints.64412024-06-20T10:42:39Z Development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries Wong, Wei Jun T Technology (General) TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering This study provides a thorough investigation into the design and evaluation of a single switch capacitor active balancer prototype designed for lithium-ion batteries. Additionally, it explores both hardware testing and software simulations, with the main goal of examining its effectiveness in different operational modes, such as stationary, charging, and discharging conditions. The hardware evaluation revealed promising results of approximately 80% and 30% improvement compared to situations without balancer during the stationary and charging phases to demonstrate significant balancing effects, indicating that the prototype can reduce voltage variations between cells to 0.1 V. On the other hand, the balancer's performance showed clear limitations when discharging, indicating a gap in its effectiveness under operating circumstances between charging and discharging conditions. Software simulations, on the other hand, generated more promising results, suggesting possible capability under all three circumstances and evaluating balancing efficiency using indicators like standard deviation and percentage difference. Interestingly, more comparison with prototypes created by other final year project students showed a repeated trend in which balancers primarily demonstrated their effectiveness only in the stationary and charging phases, similar to the difficulties in getting stable balancing performance over a battery's lifetime. 2024 Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://eprints.utar.edu.my/6441/1/3E_1902895_Final_Report_%2D_WEI_JUN_WONG.pdf Wong, Wei Jun (2024) Development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries. Final Year Project, UTAR. http://eprints.utar.edu.my/6441/
institution Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman
building UTAR Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Tunku Abdul Rahman
content_source UTAR Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utar.edu.my
topic T Technology (General)
TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering
spellingShingle T Technology (General)
TK Electrical engineering. Electronics Nuclear engineering
Wong, Wei Jun
Development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries
description This study provides a thorough investigation into the design and evaluation of a single switch capacitor active balancer prototype designed for lithium-ion batteries. Additionally, it explores both hardware testing and software simulations, with the main goal of examining its effectiveness in different operational modes, such as stationary, charging, and discharging conditions. The hardware evaluation revealed promising results of approximately 80% and 30% improvement compared to situations without balancer during the stationary and charging phases to demonstrate significant balancing effects, indicating that the prototype can reduce voltage variations between cells to 0.1 V. On the other hand, the balancer's performance showed clear limitations when discharging, indicating a gap in its effectiveness under operating circumstances between charging and discharging conditions. Software simulations, on the other hand, generated more promising results, suggesting possible capability under all three circumstances and evaluating balancing efficiency using indicators like standard deviation and percentage difference. Interestingly, more comparison with prototypes created by other final year project students showed a repeated trend in which balancers primarily demonstrated their effectiveness only in the stationary and charging phases, similar to the difficulties in getting stable balancing performance over a battery's lifetime.
format Final Year Project / Dissertation / Thesis
author Wong, Wei Jun
author_facet Wong, Wei Jun
author_sort Wong, Wei Jun
title Development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries
title_short Development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries
title_full Development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries
title_fullStr Development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries
title_full_unstemmed Development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries
title_sort development of cell-to-cell balancing circuit for lithium-ion batteries
publishDate 2024
url http://eprints.utar.edu.my/6441/1/3E_1902895_Final_Report_%2D_WEI_JUN_WONG.pdf
http://eprints.utar.edu.my/6441/
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